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  • BDD Moderators: Keif’ Richards

Drugs that make time pass faster?

Drugs that have a 'time-dilation' effect, or those with amnesiac effects will both 'alter' your perception of time. One is a 'true' altered sense, the other is simply a malfunctioning memory.

I read somewhere that the reason time flies when you're having fun of any sort is the brain marks the passage of time by noticeable events. So if you're staring at a clock, it seems to crawl.

You put it so much better than I Oxide, I truly don't really, buy into time being linear in the way we normally accept, yes we can measure a second passing ( lets not get into the whole speed of light thing we would be here for a week just on that alone !) but the whole concept of us all sharing the same thing as far as how long it seems to take to pass doesn't stack up to me.

Its a question of perception, IMO and IME our perception of time can be fluid its all part of being lucky enough to be conscious of time passing and being able to have a concept of the past and future. Time may not even be linear we may just seem to experience it that way, you can tell I find this subject quite fascinating;)

You only have to scratch the surface or what we know about quantum mechanics, the effects of gravity and object approaching light speed to see that most of what we generally accept as how things work are about as accurate as the Newtonian universe.


(you've gone to town on that sig Oxide:))
 
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Benzos !! That is if you don't mind severe memory loss haha. I used to honestly totally blackout for up to 10 days from xanax, clonazepam, etc. Can be dangerous though.
 
Phenazepam to forget a few days, actually... I thought I'd throw that in there
+1


Also, Methoxetamine is [allegedly] what caused my room mate to not remember 2 days and 3 nights. We had the "you don't remember us talking about [blank]" like each day, so a total of 4 times.
I was impressed and scared to hell at the same time.
 
The problem with amnesiac drugs is that they don't actually make the time pass faster. You only 'lose' the time in retrospect, when you look back and dont remember. During the drug effects, you don't realise you have the amnesia. The time has to actually have already passed before you forget it ever happened.
 
+1


Also, Methoxetamine is [allegedly] what caused my room mate to not remember 2 days and 3 nights. We had the "you don't remember us talking about [blank]" like each day, so a total of 4 times.
I was impressed and scared to hell at the same time.

This reminds me of a couple of times when I used to do meth.

I remember picking up a friend and smoking weed a few times in the car in my driveway. Something came up in conversation and I remembered that we had talked about it the last time I saw him, and asked him how long ago that was cause I thought it had been like a week or two. A couple times I was told that I had picked him up in the exact same fashion the previous night, and a couple other times he had said, "just the other night, that was friday (and it would be like sunday night). That shit will fuck you up in a lot of bad ways when you get to where you're staying up 4 or 5 nights. Hell, even some 3 night binges were hard on me, physically, mentally, AND emotionally. They aren't kidding about how neuro-toxic that shit is. My nervous system is fried from doing so much of that shit in such a short time.
 
For me, I would have to say that opiates make time pass by much faster than stimulants. I hate having to go to work unless I've blown a couple bags or popped a few pills. I suppose that maybe it's not so much the opiates making time pass by faster, but the fact that I hate my job so much and opiates make the job more bearable, and so, in turn, time appears to pass by faster; but that's still the illusion that time is passing by faster, right? So, yeah, I'd have to say opiates.

I'm rambling... but anyway, stimulants can actually make time feel like it's dragging if there aren't a million tasks for you to perform.
 
Benzos made work fllly by. I'd be like "Really its home time?!" ha lost years on downers.
 
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